It’s probably bad for a mod to be posting this. To be fair, I’m still 100% doing covid precautions, including N95 masking and boosters. I’m still actively very covid conscious.
I’m aware that there hasn’t been much new research on long covid numbers after 2024, or at least nothing that I can find. Trump taking over the presidency hasn’t helped. I’m very much a sciency kind of person, and I could always pinpoint a study as to why I’m still masking and being extra cautious.
Obviously caring about the vulnerable is still a very good reason to keep being cautious.
A lot of libs have been saying that “well we’re all immune from multiple infections, so long covid is over”. Clearly the opinions of libs should be discarded, and their thoughts are anecdotal af, but still I would appreciate some facts to keep me cautious through this difficult time.
BTW CDC pulse survey data still shows that around 10% of US adults have long covid.
It’s true, it opens us up to opportunistic infections. This also happens after a flu infection, which has led to some doctors dismissing it as a concern, but people don’t get the flu every 4-6 months or develop persistent flu infections like they do with covid.
For an example, here is a chart showing the rate of bacterial infections for which there are no vaccines in the UK, showing the impact covid had:
Not as bad as HIV, but not great and more widespread among the population.
We’ve also just had one of the worst flu seasons in 15 years, one of the worst whooping cough seasons since the 50’s, and here’s a chart that lists strep cases in the US:
This happened after the covid restrictions were removed, and it was blamed on “people catching up on infections they missed during the lockdown”, but it’s been three years of this shit and if anything the problem is getting worse. The rise in the number of people who have anti-vax brainworms doesn’t help, but it doesn’t explain all of it.
That is bleak. And the immunity debt myth has been debunked but still won’t die because Capital needed the status who to remain. Thank you for the clarification and the charts!